Contributors

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Ron Austin and Louise Amandes just posted this preview of their documentary on Pacific Northwest cartoonists. Here, David Lasky talks about how he became a cartoonist, and about the Carter Family graphic novel project. In HD video, the studio where the latter part of the book was created looks better than it did in real life! How do they do that?

Monday, July 16, 2012

Thanks to Tom Spurgeon for his kind mention of the book in his reports from this year's Comic Con on www.comicsreporter.com...

"...the main reason I went to Abrams was to maybe look at anything they have for
Frank Young and Dave Lasky's forthcoming Carter Family book, and I was
NOT disappointed. They brought out an unbound version of the final book, and I
got to look through it. It's handsomely mounted -- there will be a CD of radio
performances -- and at first look this may be the Dave Lasky book we've been
waiting for him to do for years and years now. I hope it is, anyway. No better
guy than that David Lasky. At any rate, I really appreciate them making that
book available to me, and I look forward to talking to Dave for CR close
to its release this Fall."

Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Humble soul that I am, I seldom think to Google my own projects and see how they're doing out in the world. A friend of my collaborator David Lasky mentioned he'd seen a write-up of Don't Forget This Song in the Previews catalog (for non comix-nuts, this is the Sears Roebuck catalog of upcoming comics, graphic novels and assorted doo-dads).

This piqued my curiosity, and here are some results of my Googly search.

1. A flattering preview/recommendation from The Library Journal:

2. Abrams Comic Art's page for the book, including this lovely comment by Art Spiegelman...

"What a fine marriage of form and content! Humble and
moving—straightforward with occasional breathtaking bravura
passages—this book echoes the Carter Family's rough-hewn sounds. It
tells of the lives, sorrows, and values of a lost America in short
episodes like a giant stack of old 78s. Using the vocabulary of comic
strips like Little Orphan Annie and Gasoline Alley, it's
as obsessive in its dedication to vernacular craft and hard work as A.P.
Carter himself. Frank Young and David Lasky have spun a work of visual
music that will replay in your head and heart well after you've finished
reading it."

3. numerous pre-order sites for the book (including Diamond Previews, the aforementioned mega-catalog)... all these listings basically use the boilerplate promotional description supplied by Abrams. It's a good description, but you'll see it all over the place over the next few months.

Indeed, the book is getting closer to release. We're supposed to get our mitts on an advance copy pretty soon. Abrams' booth at the San Diego Comic Con will have copies of the book for sale (IF the book gets back from the printers by then--a big if at this point!)

If you've seen any random web mentions of our book, please let us know! In the meantime, it's neat to see the book coming up on the horizon of the publishing/reading world...

We will showcase some sequences from the book here very soon. In the meantime, we're excited to share this news with you!
.